Grieving father takes center stage in gun debate

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Richard Martinez says he never set out to be a face of the gun-control movement and has no interest in taking deer rifles and shotguns from the hands of hunters. After all, he used to be one.

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By JOHN ROGERS

seacoastonline.com

By JOHN ROGERS

Posted May. 30, 2014 at 6:58 AM
Updated May 30, 2014 at 7:01 AM

By JOHN ROGERS

Posted May. 30, 2014 at 6:58 AM
Updated May 30, 2014 at 7:01 AM

» Social News

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Richard Martinez says he never set out to be a face of the gun-control movement and has no interest in taking deer rifles and shotguns from the hands of hunters. After all, he used to be one.

Martinez just wants to do whatever he can to end the seemingly endless string of mass killings in the nation, the latest of which took the life of his 20-year-old son and five other people before the killer shot himself last week near the University of California, Santa Barbara.

Martinez, a 60-year-old criminal defense lawyer, took center stage in the gun debate when he showed up uninvited at a sheriff's news conference a day after the May 23 killings, stepped before a bank of microphones, and in a voice filled with rage and grief blamed the death of Christopher Michaels-Martinez on "craven irresponsible politicians" who won't pass stricter gun-control laws.

"They talk about gun rights. What about Chris' right to live?" he asked. "When will this insanity stop?"

On Thursday, an exhausted Martinez said he had hardly slept since that day, his hours filled with planning his only child's funeral while fielding calls from all over the world. News organizations from Canada, Great Britain and Australia want to interview him. Other people just want to say they're sorry.

"I tell them, 'Look, I don't need your sympathy. What I need is for you to DO something,'" Martinez said during a lengthy, late-night phone interview with The Associated Press.

That something, he said, would be urging the nation's leaders to engage in a serious discussion about restricting the availability of powerful, semi-automatic weapons such as the ones a lonely, troubled young man used to randomly shoot Michaels-Martinez and two other students near campus after stabbing three people to death at the apartment the killer shared with at least two of those victims.

Nearly overnight, Martinez has become a recognizable figure in hotels, restaurants and on the streets near the Santa Barbara campus. It's a strange new situation for the man who until now has pretty much lived his life anonymously along the Central California coast where he was born and raised.

"I didn't choose this," Martinez said, adding that he believes responsible people have a right to keep guns for hunting, target shooting and their own safety.

"I grew up on a farm and I had guns," he said. "I hunted when I was a kid. I understand the appeal of hunting."

After graduating from high school, he enlisted in the Army and served two years as a military policeman in Germany. He said he had to draw his weapon once to put an end to a domestic dispute.

"I was prepared to use it if I had to," he recalled.

Martinez, however, said he just can't fathom the proliferation of high-powered, semi-automatic weapons in American society.

"How," he asked of Rodger's weapons cache, "does a troubled kid who clearly had problems wind up with 400 rounds of ammunition and three semi-automatic handguns?"

A single father, Martinez said he was incredibly close to his son. They called each other and texted several times a week and had traveled the East Coast together two years ago, when Michaels-Martinez was trying to decide which college to attend.

Less than an hour before he died, the son was on the phone excitedly telling his father that his new girlfriend planned to introduce him to her parents the following week. Martinez later met the parents at a memorial service for victims of the rampage.

Martinez said his job as a defense lawyer had sometimes brought him into contact with people charged with gun crimes. It also led him to represent the parents of troubled young people who ran up against a public mental health system that Martinez said didn't provide the necessary care for their children.

That's why he said he can never blame the parents of his son's killer for what happened. It's also why he'll keep demanding reasonable gun control.

"I'm not going to write a book, I'm not going to sue anybody," he said, explaining that such actions would only cheapen the memory of his son.

"I just want to try to make it possible so that other people don't have to go through this."